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Richard's avatar

I am reminded of the case U.S. v. Reynolds(345US1) from 1953. I have a copy of the Washington Post article from June 22, 2003 written by Timothy Lynch, entitled "An Injustice Wrapped In A Pretense". Ah, for the good old days when WaPo was not just another government lapdog.

That case seems to represent the first time a government attorney invoked the National Security claim to bamboozle and deceive SCOTUS. It came from the case of a USAF bomber crash in 1948, and the dirty deeds of government, both Solicitor General and SCOTUS, were not revealed until 2000 when the report was accidentally declassified and ended up on the internet. It clearly showed in government reports the negligence of the government.

I hope this Murthy v. Missouri will not demonstrate the complicity of SCOTUS in delivering injustice yet again.

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RSgva's avatar

Yes, important distinction. But I think there is also an ethics issue. Most reporters I have talked to – – and I’m the daughter of one—are aware that the proper role of the non-journalist in the phone call is to provide facts, not explicitly to edit the story in any way or kill it, unless the factual corrections or new facts have that effect. I suspect some journalistic ethics books like “the virtuous journalist“ or memoirs of the greats describe this tension. In other words, the three justices who were pressuring the press in their youth may have been oblivious to the fact that the pressure was probably inappropriate. If inordinate pressure were applied, the government official or other caller risks embarrassment— e.g. a description of the government is being overwrought or apoplectic etc.

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